Underlying question: WHY would Trump cause an international incident over this?
Brits march in SUPPORT of the NHS. Trump thought they were marching against it. Either way, what business is it of his? |
Months
after his party failed to pass deeply unpopular legislation that would have
taken healthcare from tens of millions of Americans, President Donald Trump on
Monday launched an attack on "universal healthcare" that misleadingly
attempted to use ongoing protests in the United Kingdom as proof that
publicly-funded systems don't work.
In
reality, thousands marched in London over the weekend to demand more National Health Service (NHS) funding, which has been
slashed as a result of British Conservatives' relentless agenda of austerity and privatization.
"They
are marching to protect [the NHS]," British journalist David
Ottewell wrote in response to the U.S. president.
"Not to replace it with a privatized system."
Trump's
tweet comes months after the GOP attempted to ram through a bill that would
have repealed the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and taken healthcare from as many
as 32 million Americans.
Meanwhile,
an unprecedented number of Democrats have
co-sponsored Sen. Bernie Sanders' (I-Vt.) Medicare for All bill, which he introduced last September.
Polls
conducted over the past year have consistently found that a growing number of
Americans are rapidly "shifting toward the political left" on
healthcare and embracing the idea of a publicly-funded system that guarantees
coverage to all as a right.
According
to an AP/NORC poll published last July, 62
percent of Americans believe it is "the federal government's
responsibility to make sure that all Americans have health care coverage."
Under
the current U.S. healthcare system, nearly 30 million Americans lack
healthcare—a number that has risen significantly since Trump took
office.
Trump
has even signaled support for "universal healthcare" and praised the
publicly-funded healthcare systems of other nations in the past, as many
were quick to note in response to his tweet on
Monday.